Usability Engineering
Reconditioned merchandise: extended structured report formats in usability inspection
CHI '04 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to the Web (2nd Edition)
Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to the Web (2nd Edition)
Tracking defect warnings across versions
Proceedings of the 2006 international workshop on Mining software repositories
User Interface Design and Evaluation (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies) (The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Interactive Technologies)
Maturing Usability: Quality in Software, Interaction and Value (Human-Computer Interaction Series)
Maturing Usability: Quality in Software, Interaction and Value (Human-Computer Interaction Series)
Handbook of Usability TestingXXX: Howto Plan, Design, and Conduct Effective Tests
Handbook of Usability TestingXXX: Howto Plan, Design, and Conduct Effective Tests
Comparative usability evaluation (CUE-4)
Behaviour & Information Technology
Supporting novice usability practitioners with usability engineering tools
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Usability Testing Essentials: Ready, Set...Test!
Usability Testing Essentials: Ready, Set...Test!
Rent a Car in Just 0, 60, 240 or 1,217 Seconds? - Comparative Usability Measurement, CUE-8
Journal of Usability Studies
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Usability practitioners conduct formative evaluations, such as heuristic evaluations and thinking aloud tests, to identify potential problems in a user interface as part of the iterative design cycle. The findings of a formative evaluation (in essence, a list of potential problems) are usually compiled into written reports and typically delivered as a PDF or Word document. A written report is convenient for reading, but makes it difficult to reuse the findings electronically. The usability markup language (UsabML) defines a structured reporting format for the results of usability evaluations. In agile software development the direct handover of usability findings to software engineers can speed up development cycles and improve software quality. Usability managers can now enter the findings of formative evaluations into a new, web-based system called Usability Reporting Manager (URM). Findings can be exported in UsabML format, which in turn can easily be imported by software engineers into an issue-tracking system connected to a source code repository. UsabML can also be transformed into other formats such as HTML and PDF via stylesheets (XSL).